Police prepare to remove a protestor from the top of a vehicle waiting to enter an exploratory drill site for the controversial gas extraction process known as fracking at Barton Moss in Manchester, England, Monday, Jan. 13, 2014. (AP/Jon Super)

Fracking companies in Britain privately admit they are “suffering” and struggling to secure finance, according to government documents obtained via freedom of information.

In a meeting last May with then-business minister Anna Soubry, the Onshore Energy Services Group (OESG) said raising the money needed to develop a wide-scale fracking infrastructure was proving difficult.

“Industry are finding it a challenge to get support from British banks… all funding, therefore, comes from overseas and self-growth,” the group said, according to the government’s minutes of the meeting.

The trade association, which represents small and medium-sized oil and gas companies [SMEs] in Britain, also raised concerns that if fracking takes off, supply chain companies won’t be ready to provide the equipment needed to build the infrastructure to support the industry.

It told the government that “incremental gains” will be made in making individual fracking sites operational, but that the “social license will be more important when this industry scales up”.

In other words, getting public support will be key.

“We will go nowhere if [companies] are fought at each stage,” the group said.

The OESG also expressed concern about delays in drilling exploratory wells, and the knock-on effects: “Operators are struggling, [it’s] taking so long for them to get off the ground that SMEs are suffering.”

However, the bank’s Environmental and Social Risk Briefing, which outlines its overall approach to lending, says “significant environmental concerns have emerged regarding the hydraulic fracturing of shale rock”, highlighting in particular heavy water use and the possibility of methane leaks.

UK Finance, formerly the British Bankers Association and the body that represents the UK banking sector, declined to comment on banks’ policies on lending to the fracking industry.

Public opposition

Energy expert Professor Paul Stevens, Distinguished Fellow at the Chatham House think tank, said that financing is key to fracking in the UK: “This is a very important point. It’s why the US has had a shale revolution, because the banks were willing and happy to lend to frackers.

“The US revolution was based on Mama and Papa companies that were extremely reliant on access to credit.

“Without access to finance, fracking is simply not going to happen in the UK.”

However, he said it was the public’s view on fracking that would ultimately decide its fate.

OESG members were “absolutely right” to focus on public opposition, he said.

“Irrespective of the pros and cons of fracking, and I’ve never been convinced it’s as bad as the NGOs say, they have convinced the world [that fracking is dangerous], and nothing is going to change that.

“The shale industry is never going to take off because of public opposition”.

When contacted by Energydesk to discuss the views expressed by its members at its meeting with Anna Soubry, the OESG said it was unable to respond in time.

The meeting was held on 15 May 2016. The members of the OESG present were Remsol, Clear Solutions International, Moorhouse Drilling and Completions, Ground Gas Solutions, atg UV Technology, PR Marriott Drilling, Zetland Group and FBG.

This work by Energy Desk is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 International License.

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